Tag Archive: Alexander Payne


ON THE ROAD TO NEBRASKA

NEBRASKA directed by Alexander Payne (USA, 2013)

Today is Father’s Day in Italy so it seems the right day to be reflecting on this movie.

As with Payne’s  About Schmidt & Sideways, character comes before plot and goes some way to explaining why the premise of the film is so contrived. We have to take it as a given that Woody Grant (Bruce Dern) is gullible and naive enough to believe that he has won a million dollars in a magazine’s prize draw even though none of his other personality traits make this particularly credible.

Woody is cantankerous, fiercely independent and unsentimental. Thick-skinned and mule-headed, this old man shows no particular affection towards his wife or his two sons.

On the contrary, he seems to regard the younger son , David (Wil Forte), as a schmuck. This negative judgement gradually softens as, unlike the older sardonic son Ross, played by Bob ‘better call Saul’ Odenkirk, David has a limitless patience and tact. He alone is prepared to humour the old man’s obsessive demands rather than concede that he should be confined to a care home. Continue reading

THE DESCENDANTS directed by Alexander Payne (USA, 2011)

Dad & daughter : Matt + Alex (George Clooney and Shailene Woodley)

This movie has won over most American critics and also looks likely to win George Clooney an Oscar for his role as affluent property lawyer, Matt King.

But while it’s a warm-hearted, highly watchable film, it is far from being the classic it’s made out to be.

As a mid-life crisis movie it is not in the same league as Payne’s earlier films (Sideways + About Schmidt) and I tend to agree with one of the dissenting critics, Rex Reed of The New York Observer, who described in as “a soap opera with Hawaiian shirts”.

I also hated the soundtrack of Hawaiian music which is at best mildly irritating and at worst a major intrusion.

The story is of a lost,and soon to be lone, parent confronted by pressing life choices.

Matt’s  wife, Liz, has had a motorboat accident and she is now in a coma with no realistic hope of recovery. As a result, Matt  has the full charge of  his daughters Scotty and Alex aged 10 and 17. This is a big responsibility and a major headache since  both girls are wayward, rebellious and practically unmanageable. His problems are compounded by the fact that Alex’s boyfriend Sid comes over as a stoner nerd from hell. Continue reading